Part 1 of 6 Copyright @calibeachgirl
All rights reserved, 2012
Thanks to Lewis, Bill and Elliot for their support...
*
There was an urgent knocking on the apartment door. William Doyle, Bill to his friends, finally waking up into the morning sun, pulled on a pair of trousers and went to answer it. A Western Union boy was there, holding out a telegram in his left hand, his open right palm waiting for what he considered the customary tip.
After taking the telegram, Bill reached into his pocket and flipped him a nickel. "Here."
"I'm to wait for a reply," the boy said, leaning against the door-jamb.
"Wait a minute," replied Bill as he shut the door in the boy's face.
In his own room, Jack was just sitting up in bed, suffering through another faulty rendition of 'When My Baby Smiles At Me' playing in the apartment below. God, he thought, let me sleep. Wondering who would be knocking on the door so early in the morning, he looked at the nightstand clock. Seven o'clock! It was too early on a Saturday morning to be awake, he thought, especially following a late Friday night. The girls the night before had been so friendly as the liquor flowed in the speakeasy. His throat was still hoarse from the cigarettes he had smoked. He decided it was time to quit smoking.
"A telegram came for you," said Bill, looking in from the room's doorway, laughing at his friend's plight. "It would seem to be a matter of some urgency since the boy is waiting for an answer."
"A telegram?" he asked in surprise. "Who would send...?" He wondered if it were from some angry father demanding the righting of some perceived wrong upon his daughter. God, he thought, it's 1925! Things were different, now, the War had seen to that. If some wonderful young girl wants to bestow her favors upon him, who was he to complain?
Making an effort to conceal his concern, he took the telegram and opened the light yellow envelope. If it were about some girl, wouldn't it have made more sense for the angry father to arrive in person?
A single glance at the telegram was enough to relieve Jack's apprehension. It was from someone named G. Lincoln, whoever that was, about his uncle whom he had not seen in more than ten years.
"This comes from someone working for my uncle. It seems he's quite ill and wants me to come see him." He looked up, confused. "Why now? Just because he's sick?"
Bill hesitated. Jack's uncle was quite well-to-do, incredibly well-to-do, but a grim, rigid, humorless man, prone to condemn anyone whose nature differed from his own and quick to condemn any fancied immorality which he perceived in the conduct of those around him. The moral and religious principles that Jack's father had possessed in a more moderate degree had been transformed by his uncle into a kind of fanaticism.
But, Jack knew, his uncle's fanaticism was inconsistent. While he constantly preached about the virtues of humility and speaking against the pursuit of worldly wealth, he still had condemned Jack's father for marrying 'beneath' him. In the meantime, he, himself, had amassed a huge fortune.
Jack had not wanted to accept the summons. He had been sixteen, the first and last time he had spent time with his uncle, and the circumstances of his having so recently lost his mother made him all the more determined to have nothing to do with the man who had loudly failed to appreciate her merits and beauty.
"You know," his uncle had said, "that you're my heir should anything happen to me. Someday, all this will be yours."
"Well," said Bill, "you might as well go on and see him and see what's what. Stay a week or so, and if you don't like it come back early but it would do you good to get away from here, if even only for a little."
"I guess I could go and see him. I thought he had gotten married a while ago. I wonder what happened there." Of course, Jack thought, all talk of inheritance had changed when his uncle remarried following the death of his wife... a quite young woman, Jack had heard.
He remembered his visit so many years ago. His uncle was a man of unbending... Jack really had no word for whatever his uncle was. The man was a miser, never spending an unnecessary penny even if his life depended on it.
"Damn it!" he exclaimed, finally getting out of bed. "I might as well go. Tell the boy to send a reply saying so, will you?" He went into the bathroom, soaped his brush and lathered his face, then shaved and finally started the shower, waiting for the water to warm up. A half-hour later, shaved, showered and dressed, he went into the kitchen for breakfast.
"I fixed you a couple of eggs and some bacon. Anything else, you're on your own," said Bill as he set the dish down on the table. "Eat up."
He wondered what circumstances could have motivated his uncle to renew his relationship with him.
That morning, Jack reluctantly went to the Southern Pacific Railroad station to arrange for a ticket from Los Angeles to the coastal community where his uncle had his manse. He thought about taking Bill with him but decided not to. He didn't want to subject his friend to his uncle's whims about life and religion.
The next morning, as he was packing his valise for the trip, there was another knock on the door. Opening the door, Jack looked at the Western Union boy who had returned, yet again. He held out a second telegram.
Jack opened the second telegram and his eyes widened as he read the typed letters. "Oh, my God!" he exclaimed to Bill and the waiting boy. "My uncle's dead and evidently, so are his second wife and child. Damn!"
"What happened?" asked Bill, just leaving the bathroom.
"They died from diphtheria, all three of them. Damn, the boy couldn't be more than six. That's horrible."
"What are you going to do now?"
"I don't know, go there I suppose. What else can I do, now?"
"Who's been sending these telegrams, anyways?"
"The same as the first one... G. Lincoln." Jack sat down, silently staring dazedly down at the telegram. He tried to absorb its contents. Bill, hovering nearby, tried to look disinterested, yet was burning with curiosity.
Jack said nothing but passed along the second telegram to Bill. As he watched his friend peruse the message, he knew that nothing would ever be the same.
"A very sad telegram," Bill observed. "I'm sorry, Jack. I guess there's no way you could have possibly gotten there in time, could you?"
"No, not at all. Eventually, I'm going to have to go."
"I wonder who this Lincoln person is?" asked Bill, still holding the disconcerting telegram.
"I don't know but I suppose I should send a telegram telling him that I've gotten his news and will attend to it as soon as possible." Jack stood up from the kitchen table. "I think I'll go lie down. What with one thing and the other, it's been an exhausting kind of day, don't you think? Damn!"
With the announcement of his uncle's death in the newspaper, Jack's whole life underwent a sudden and dramatic change. He continued to live in his downtown apartment with his friend, but that was the only part of his life that remained the same. His landlady suddenly became much friendlier, suggesting that a late night rendezvousi would not be rebuffed but he privately thought that he'd rather die than take advantage of her offer.
The greatest change and in some ways, the greatest irritation, was the way he was treated by his acquaintances who now appeared either ill-at-ease in his presence or those whom he had little to do with who were suddenly polite to a fault.
Letters of condolence came from all quarters, accompanied by invitations that would have astonished and gratified him a few years earlier. Astonished as he was, it was now mixed with contempt rather than gratification. So evident was it that his newfound popularity was linked directly to his newfound wealth that he was in no danger of having his head turned by it, regardless how lovely the invitation or the young lady came wrapped.
His cynicism was heightened when he received a letter from a former lady friend, one whom he had once offered marriage, who ostensibly was offering condolence for his loss but ended her letter with a few lines, which alluded delicately to the possibility of reconciliation. He left the letter unanswered, throwing it into the wastebasket. When she had turned him down, it had been solely on her perceived need for a wealthier suitor and at the time, he did not fit her image of a husband financially.
There could be no doubt as to the extent of his new wealth, as Jack discovered after a meeting with his uncle's lawyers in San Francisco. His late uncle's annual income had numbered in the several tens of millions each year and was derived not only from the rents of many properties but also from stocks in mining, oil, and railroads, and government bonds.
"I had no idea," Jack said, "that my uncle owned so many properties in the city," when he learned of the full extent of his uncle's holdings. "I must say I am surprised. When I visited him years ago, all he could talk about were the evils in the city. And this property around the harbor, you can't mean to say that belonged to him? It's common knowledge that the whole area is given up to speakeasies and brothels."
John Everett, the attorney who was attending him at this meeting, coughed slightly and spoke in a repressive voice. "Your uncle was a shrewd man who did not allow his religious values to stand in the way of making a profit, shall we say. It is true that the property you mention is not the most affluent quarter of the city but I assure you it brings in its rent quite regularly, without fail. Mr. Crawford, it would be in your..."
"I have no doubt that it does," Jack said, "but I would prefer not to derive my income from the kind of businesses that are there. It just doesn't seem right."